Log Out

with Michael Enright

Show highlight

July 1-31 repeats of some of our favourite shows from the past season: The Beatles Come to Canada, Jean Sutherland Boggs, the Waltonsteins, James Bond and Housework. Also, the Law of Fashion, the history of the Stratford festival, 90 Minutes with a Bullet, Farley Mowat and Grey Owl and much more.

timestamp

Housework. We all have to do it, and most of us hate it. This edition of Rewind was originally presented in February of this year, and it tackles the thorny issue of who does what when it come to cleaning, shopping, tidying and washing.

most recent

Housework. We all have to do it, and most of us hate it. This edition of Rewind was originally presented in February of this year, and it tackles the thorny issue of who does what when it come to cleaning, shopping, tidying and washing. More
Jul 30, 9:15 AM ET

Listen to the Latest

Housework. We all have to do it, and most of us hate it. This edition of Rewind was originally presented in February of this year, and it tackles the thorny issue of who does what when it come to cleaning, shopping, tidying and washing.

Past Episodes

He's the most famous spy in the world. James Bond was created by Ian Fleming, a former intelligence officer who wrote spy novels. Those best selling novels morphed into a movie franchise. The film Goldfinger was released 50 years ago last fall and is still considered one of the best.

Dr Jean Sutherland Boggs was passionate about art and helping Canadians to appreciate it. Rewind pays tribute to this remarkable woman who died last August. This episode was originally presented on November 20, 2014.

In 1964 the hottest musical group for teenagers was the Beatles. Their first hit, Love Me Do was topping the charts, they had appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show and toured the U.S. Now they were coming to Canada. Teenage girls everywhere fainted at the news. And of course CBC Radio covered the tour.

A program first heard in 1980 that featured the sounds, stories and voices of Africa. You'll hear vivid portraits of some of the people who lived there, a time when apartheid was the law of the land and division between the races was strictly enforced.

In 1953, CBC engineers spent weeks collecting the sounds of marsh birds of Manitoba. To capture these evocative bird songs, they used the latest cutting edge technology, the parabolic microphone. The result is an award winning documentary called Songs of the Marsh.